Yes, it's in the System Center family. There are direct ties to SCOM as
well. 

 

 

 

Chris Bodnar, MCSE
Sr. Systems Engineer
Distributed Systems Service Delivery - Intel Services
Guardian Life Insurance Company of America
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 610-807-6459
Fax: 610-807-6003

  _____  

From: Tom Miller [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, May 22, 2009 11:58 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Hyper-V with VMM

 

That's interesting.  Is that the sister component to Microsoft's System
Center Configuration Manager?  That product has serious bloat/bulk and am
not to impressed with that either, although it does the job...eventually
when PCs catch up to the system.

>>> "Christopher Bodnar" <[email protected]> 5/22/2009 10:13 AM
>>>

Just installed SCVMM2008 for testing, and thought I'd pass along my first
impressions (less than 24 hours). Keep in mind all of this will be in
comparison to ESX with Virtual Center:

 

1.      It looks very similar to SCOM 2007. Interface is almost identical.

2.      I see no way to give granular access down to the VM level. It
seems you can only go down to the HOST level, or groupings of HOST
machines. Not down to the VM, which is very disappointing. I don't see
much improvement over using Azman (Authorization Manager). 
3.      I really like the job monitor. Looks very detailed. 
4.      The status of the Host machine was listed as "needs attention". It
tells you that the "Virtualization service version" is out of date and
needs to be updated. But nowhere does it tell you what it needs to be
updated to, or give you a link to download the update. I think that is
lousy. Even if you run Windows update, it doesn't show you the update you
need. I finally found this:

 

http://trycatch.be/blogs/roggenk/archive/2008/11/20/scvmm-2008-hyper-v-hos
t-needs-attention-virtualization-service-version-upgrade-available.aspx

5.      The next thing I've noticed is that there seems to be almost no
utilization information on the Host or the VM's.

 

So far I'm very unimpressed. With all the stuff you don't get in VMM
compared to Virtual Center. And that's not even talking about HA and DRS.
I'm not sure how Hyper-V handles that kind of functionality with VMM. 

 

 

 

Chris Bodnar, MCSE
Sr. Systems Engineer
Distributed Systems Service Delivery - Intel Services
Guardian Life Insurance Company of America
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 610-807-6459
Fax: 610-807-6003

 

 

 
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